Any kind of white powder can be reported as a dangerous poison. Like anthrax or similar.I don't get the flour thing.
Any kind of white powder can be reported as a dangerous poison. Like anthrax or similar.I don't get the flour thing.
I used to live in a place that had a serious choke point in the highways leading out of Chicago towards the Lake County suburbs. I used to joke that you could bring the whole area to a standstill by having one nude girl on an overpass.Yeah but there are many simple ways to cause chaos in a major city. Doesn’t cost much at all. For example: drop a few bags of flour on the bridge before the morning commute; rent a couple cars and crash them together on a busy road; throw some beach balls onto the freeway in the morning.
I think the difference is that we used to be well behaved and actually cared. In this wirld them, who knows?
If they were Rats we could trace them to the nest.The CBC is reporting 2 arrests in connection with drones at Gatwick.
The CBC is reporting 2 arrests in connection with drones at Gatwick.
A man and woman arrested in connection with drone sightings that grounded flights at Gatwick Airport have been released without charge.
The 47-year-old man and 54-year-old woman, from Crawley, West Sussex, were arrested on Friday night on suspicion of "the criminal use of drones".
Sussex Police said the pair were no longer suspects.
Perhaps not as alarming as it seems, given that the airspace has already been cleared due to the drone threat.Having a hard kill laser anywhere near an airport... well I wouldn’t my name on that approval regardless of cost.
Interesting idea ... one flaw that comes to mind would possibly be the size of the drone... I thinkThere are videos of these trained birds taking out drones already on the internet and it's very impressive.
I agree. There are many articles about training falcons and eagles to attack drones. For example: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...tary-is-using-falcons-to-build-a-drone-killerI think there could be big money for falconers over the horizon. Falcons/hawks could be one of the most effective methods of drone control that humans could possibly conceive. With some kevlar armor these birds could drag the copters out of the sky with little risk of injury.
That's maybe because flying old fashioned RCVs requires a significantly larger level of skills than a modern drone. Now anyone can fly those things, and they're also way cheaper. No wonder they've proliferated so much.I am not alone in regretting a once beautiful hobby being weaponized.
Drone "hot spots" in Australia are getting sensors to automatically identify the aircraft and their pilots.
Australia's Civil Aviation Safety Authority (Casa) said it would install the equipment at the nation's airports starting next month.